Emsworth Now

I have lived in the Emsworth bungalow since 2004. It has two bedrooms, a garden I can manage in sections and more cupboard space than one person needs. I still know what is in most of it.

This morning I watered the pots at the back and worked along one side of the path. I stopped after twenty minutes because my knees hurt. That is how I garden now. I do part of it, go indoors and return another day.

There were three family messages waiting. Claire wanted to know whether I was free next Sunday. Michael had sent a photograph of Poppy holding a certificate without saying what it was for. Poppy had added six clapping hands and a picture of a dog, which did not help.

Retirement has given me more say over my week, but the family still uses parts of it. I collect Poppy on Tuesdays. I see Claire and her family most weekends. Michael comes here or asks me over several times each month. I meet Pauline for lunch twice a month.

Pauline and I still discuss school offices. The difference is that neither of us has to return afterwards and deal with whatever has happened while we were out.

Once a month I go to the local history group. I joined for the talks and stayed because people bring records, compare dates and disagree over street names. I know where I am with that.

I read crime novels and biographies. I drive locally, though I no longer volunteer for unfamiliar motorway journeys. I have nothing to prove to a roundabout in another county.

I work on the Life Archive two or three times a week. Some entries begin with a certificate or photograph. Others begin with a sentence somebody repeated often enough for it to become part of the family account. I check names and dates when I can. The family does not always agree.

There are public entries, private entries and unfinished Notes. I have not written every argument or included every illness. Some memories belong partly to other people, and they are allowed a say.

Today I reviewed the Note about the blue coat and left it undated. I corrected a Weymouth caption and added a missing name to another photograph. Michael later explained that Poppy’s certificate was for reading fifty books.

After lunch I went back outside and finished the pots by the fence.

Life Stages

Later life, Present day

Topics

Ageing, Everyday life, Family, Home, Retirement

People

Claire Bennett, Michael Carter, Pauline Brooks, Poppy Carter

Places

Emsworth